Title: A New Golden Age for Computer Architecture

Date: Thursday, August 29, 2019

Time: 01:00 PM Eastern Daylight Time

Duration: 1 hour

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Summary

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In the 1980s, Mead and Conway democratized chip design and high-level
language programming surpassed assembly language programming, which made
instruction set advances viable. Innovations like Reduced Instruction Set
Computers (RISC), superscalar, and speculation ushered in a Golden Age of
computer architecture, when performance doubled every 18 months. The ending
of Dennard Scaling and Moore’s Law crippled this path; microprocessor
performance improved only 3% last year! In addition to poor performance
gains of modern microprocessors, Spectre recently demonstrated timing
attacks that leak information at high rates. The ending of Dennard scaling
and Moore's law and the deceleration of performance gains for standard
microprocessors are not problems that must be solved but facts that if
accepted offer breathtaking opportunities. *We believe high-level,
domain-specific languages and architectures, freeing architects from the
chains of proprietary instruction sets and the demand from the public for
improved security will usher in a new Golden Age. Aided by open source
ecosystems, agilely developed chips will convincingly demonstrate advances
and thereby accelerate commercial adoption.* The instruction set philosophy
of the general-purpose processors in these chips will likely be RISC, which
has stood the test of time. We envision the same rapid improvement as in
the last Golden Age, but this time in cost, energy, and security as well as
in performance. Like in the 1980s, the next decade will be exciting for
computer architects in academia and in industry!
Speakers
SPEAKER
Dave Patterson
Distinguished Engineer, Google; ACM A.M. Turing Award Laureate

David Patterson is a Berkeley CS Professor Emeritus, a Google Distinguished
Engineer, and the RISC-V Foundation Vice-Chair. He received his BA, MS, and
PhD degrees from UCLA. His Reduced Instruction Set Computer (RISC),
Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks (RAID), and Network of Workstation
projects helped lead to multibillion-dollar industries. This work led to 40
awards for research, teaching, and service plus many papers and seven
books. The best known book is *Computer Architecture: A Quantitative
Approach* and the newest is *The RISC-V Reader: An Open Architecture Atlas*.
In 2018 he and John Hennessy shared the ACM A.M Turing Award.
MODERATOR
Cliff Young
Software Engineer, Google Brain

Cliff Young is a software engineer in the Google Brain team, where he works
on codesign for deep learning accelerators. He is one of the designers of
Google’s Tensor Processing Unit (TPU), which is used in production
applications including Search, Maps, Photos, and Translate. TPUs also
powered AlphaGo’s historic 4-1 victory over Go champion Lee Sedol.
Previously, Cliff built special-purpose supercomputers for molecular
dynamics at D. E. Shaw Research and worked at Bell Labs. Cliff holds AB,
MS, and PhD degrees in computer science from Harvard University.
Attend

This presentation will begin on Thursday, August 29, 2019 at 01:00 PM
Eastern Daylight Time.

Audience members may arrive 15 minutes in advance of this time.

Skip Cave
Cave Consulting LLC
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